Galactodenia Sundue Et Al 2012 0.Pdf

Galactodenia Sundue Et Al 2012 0.Pdf

Galactodenia, a New Genus of Grammitid Ferns Segregated from Terpsichore (Polypodiaceae) Author(s) :Michael A. Sundue, Paulo H. Labiak, Julián Mostacero, and Alan R. Smith Source: Systematic Botany, 37(2):339-346. 2012. Published By: The American Society of Plant Taxonomists URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/full/10.1600/036364412X635395 BioOne (www.bioone.org) is a nonprofit, online aggregation of core research in the biological, ecological, and environmental sciences. BioOne provides a sustainable online platform for over 170 journals and books published by nonprofit societies, associations, museums, institutions, and presses. Your use of this PDF, the BioOne Web site, and all posted and associated content indicates your acceptance of BioOne’s Terms of Use, available at www.bioone.org/page/terms_of_use. Usage of BioOne content is strictly limited to personal, educational, and non-commercial use. Commercial inquiries or rights and permissions requests should be directed to the individual publisher as copyright holder. BioOne sees sustainable scholarly publishing as an inherently collaborative enterprise connecting authors, nonprofit publishers, academic institutions, research libraries, and research funders in the common goal of maximizing access to critical research. Systematic Botany (2012), 37(2): pp. 339–346 © Copyright 2012 by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists DOI 10.1600/036364412X635395 Galactodenia, a New Genus of Grammitid Ferns Segregated from Terpsichore (Polypodiaceae) Michael A. Sundue,1,2,6 Paulo H. Labiak,3 Julia´n Mostacero,4 and Alan R. Smith5 1The New York Botanical Garden, 200th St. and Southern Blvd., Bronx, New York 10458-5126 U. S. A. 2Current Address, The Pringle Herbarium, Dept. of Plant Biology, The University of Vermont, 27 Colchester Ave., Burlington, Vermont 05405 U. S. A. 3Universidade Federal do Parana´, Departamento de Botaˆnica, Caixa Postal 19031, 81531-980, Curitiba-PR, Brazil. 4Universidad Central de Venezuela, Fundacio´n Instituto Bota´nico de Venezuela, Herbario Nacional de Venezuela, Apartado 2156, Caracas 1010-A, Venezuela. 5University Herbarium, 1001 Valley Life Sciences Bldg. # 2465, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-2465 U. S. A. 6Author for correspondence ([email protected]) Communicating Editor: Thomas L. P. Couvreur Abstract—Polyphyly among genera of grammitid ferns has necessitated several nomenclatural innovations. The genus Galactodenia is here described to accommodate two species that were previously placed in Terpsichore, G. delicatula and G. subscabra, and three new species that are here described, G. pumila, G. parriseae, and G. vareschii. In recent phylogenetic studies, the two previously described species form a clade sister to the clade of Lellingeria, Melpomene, and Stenogrammitis, and are not closely related to either Terpsichore or Alansmia, two genera that they have been previously considered close to. Galactodenia can be diagnosed by having concolorous rhizome scales, monomorphic fronds with non-calcareous hydathodes, and hairs that are simple and 2-celled or 1-furcate and 3-celled with large translucent clavate glands that produce a viscid exudate. Most species of Galactodenia are found in montane forests from southern Mexico and the West Indies to Bolivia, from 2,000–4,000 m. One exception to this is G. pumila, which is known only from isolated granite inselbergs at 1,500 m, in southwestern Venezuela. All five species are illustrated, and a distribution map and a key are provided. Keywords—Epiphyte, inselberg, montane, morphology, Neotropical, taxonomy. Systematics of Neotropical grammitids have undergone Alansmia are distantly related to T. delicatula and T. subscabra, numerous changes following a series of molecular phyloge- which are instead supported as sister to the clade that includes netic studies (Ranker et al. 2004; Labiak et al. 2010a, 2010b; Lellingeria, Melpomene A. R. Sm. & R. C. Moran, and Sundue et al. 2010; Hirai et al. 2011) demonstrating the Stenogrammitis (Ranker et al. 2004; Lehnert et al. 2009; Labiak polyphyly of three prominent genera: Lellingeria A. R. Sm. & et al. 2010b; Sundue et al. 2010). R. C. Moran (sensu Smith et al. 1991), Micropolypodium Sundue et al. (2010) diagnosed the clade of Terpsichore Hayata (sensu Smith 1992), and Terpsichore A. R. Sm. (sensu delicatula and T. subscabra, and distinguished it from related Smith 1993). Together, these genera account for ca. 60% of the genera by having dorsiventral rhizomes with ventral root Neotropical grammitid flora. Consequently, numerous nomen- insertion, concolorous rhizome scales with glandular mar- clatural innovations have been proposed, including the estab- gins, monomorphic fronds with non-calcareous hydathodes, lishment of Leucotrichum Labiak and Stenogrammitis Labiak to and hairs that are simple and 2-celled or 1-furcate and 3-celled, accommodate portions of the former Lellingeria, Moranopteris with large translucent clavate glands that produce a viscid exu- R. Y. Hirai & J. Prado to accommodate the Neotropical species date (see op. cit. for additional characters). We maintain most of the former Micropolypodium,andAlansmia M. Kessler & of those characters here; however, we expand the description Moguel and Ascogrammitis Sundue to accommodate por- of the rhizome to include radially symmetrical plants with tions of the former Terpsichore. These new genera are suf- radial root insertion, and the rhizome scales to include non- ficient to house most of the Neotropical species in need glandular margins. of new placement; however ca. 35 species, currently resid- The characters of the glandular hairs alone are sufficient to ing under Terpsichore, are still pending placement in suit- distinguish Galactodenia from nearly all other grammitid ferns, able genera. the one exception being Chrysogrammitis Parris, a genus of Here, we establish Galactodenia to accommodate Terpsichore two species from southeastern Asia (Parris 1998, 2009). Glan- delicatula (M. Martens & Galeotti) A. R. Sm., T. subscabra dular hairs of Chrysogrammitis are superficially similar to those (Klotzsch) B. Leo´n & A. R. Sm., and three new species of Galactodenia, but differ by being more deeply orange, shinier, (described below) that have been discovered as a result of and by their more enlarged terminal cell. Chrysogrammitis can our recent efforts to revise the Neotropical grammitid flora further be distinguished by lacking hydathodes. Phylogenetic (Leo´n and Smith 2003; Sundue and Kessler 2008; Sundue analyses of cpDNA sequences (Ranker et al. 2004; Sundue et al. 2010a; Labiak et al. 2010a; Labiak 2011; Kessler et al. 2011; 2010) do not support a close relationship between the two Rouhan et al. 2012). genera; thus their similarity is interpreted as an example of The two previously described species treated here (Terpsichore the striking convergent morphological patterns found among delicatula and T. subscabra) were included by Smith (1993) the grammitid ferns. under “group 300 of his informal infrageneric classification for Given the topology of current phylogenetic hypotheses Terpsichore. This group was based upon Terpsichore lanigera and abundant diagnostic character data, we choose to pro- (Desv.)A.R.Sm.,andwasrecentlyrecognizedasanewgenus, vide a new name for the clade that includes Terpsichore Alansmia, by Kessler et al. (2011). Molecular phylogenetic delicatula, T. subscabra, and the three species described below. analyses, however, indicate that both Terpsichore s. s. and We believe that alternate nomenclatural solutions, such as 339 340 SYSTEMATIC BOTANY [Volume 37 combining these five species along with Lellingeria (49 species), with or without setae, provided throughout with glandular Melpomene (29 species), and Stenogrammitis (25 species) into hairs, these simple and 2-celled, or 1-furcate and 3-celled, asinglegenus(Lellingeria is the oldest name) would the glandular cells clavate, hyaline, milky-white to gray or be counter-productive because it would replace several golden brown; petioles with a single vascular bundle, black- moderately-sized, morphologically uniform and diagnosable ish; laminae membranaceous or chartaceous, 1-pinnatisect to genera with a large heterogeneous genus that could not 1-pinnate-pinnatisect; rachises blackish, visible on both sides easily be diagnosed by morphological characters alone. of the laminae; pinnae with blackish costae, these often visible on both sides of the laminae; veins simple, free, not black- ish, and not visible without transmitted light; hydathodes Materials and Methods present, reddish, non-cretaceous, sometimes poorly devel- Selected specimens were examined from the following herbaria: BM, oped and difficult to see; sori round, with or without BR, COL, DS, F, IEB, K, LPB, MERF, MEXU, MICH, MO, NY, PMA, PORT, paraphyses, the paraphyses simple glandular hairs similar UC, US, VEN, VT, and XAL. We cite a single specimen per political to those of the lamina; sporangia glabrous, or, when young, administrative division. Detailed description of how morphological char- bearing glands similar to those found on the lamina; spores acters and phylogenetic relationships are interpreted can be found in Ranker et al. (2004), and Sundue (2010a, 2010b). The dot-distribution green, trilete. map was generated from coordinates reported on specimen labels, or Etymology—The name Galactodenia refers to the milky-white georeferenced as accurately as possible from locality data when coordi- glandular hairs characteristic of these plants [Gr. galacto = milk,

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